Belcher v. Tacoma Eastern Railroad

168 P. 782, 99 Wash. 34, 1917 Wash. LEXIS 1013
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 14, 1917
DocketNo. 14061
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 168 P. 782 (Belcher v. Tacoma Eastern Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Belcher v. Tacoma Eastern Railroad, 168 P. 782, 99 Wash. 34, 1917 Wash. LEXIS 1013 (Wash. 1917).

Opinion

Webster, J.

Appellant brought this action against respondent for the recovery of excess payments amounting to $7,874.04, arising out of the claim that respondent had charged appellant’s assignor, the Tidewater Lumber Company, a higher rate, based upon a higher minimum load per car, for transporting its logs a lesser distance on the same line and in the same direction than it had charged the St. Paul & Tacoma Lumber Company, a competitor of the Tidewater Lumber Company, for performing a like and contemporaneous service. The essential allegations of the complaint are that, during the time in question, the respondent published and had in force certain local freight tariffs, quoting rates for the transportation of logs from certain named stations on its line to the city of Tacoma, at $1 per thousand feet, with a minimum of five thousand feet per car. These tariffs contained the following provision:

“The above rates will apply only from and to points named and only on logs being cut from St. Paul & Tacoma Lumber Company’s lands by the North Coast Timber Company and consigned to the St. Paul & Tacoma Lumber Company’s mills at Tacoma.”

On December 6, 1915, the respondent, through its trafile manager, formally petitioned the public service commission for permission and authority to absorb and cancel certain [36]*36switching charges, amounting approximately to $6,500, which had accrued at Tacoma on logs consigned to the St. Paul & Tacoma Lumber Company from various points on respondent’s line of railroad. It probably will be conducive to clearness to set forth at length the petition, a copy of which is attached to the complaint as an exhibit. It reads as follows:

“Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company, “Traffic Manager.
“Seattle, Wash. Dec. 6, 1915. “Washington Public Service Commission, File B.
“Olympia, Washington.
“Gentlemen:. Permit me to formally present to your honorable (body) the subject of a long term dispute between the Milwaukee Company and the Tacoma Eastern RR on the one hand, with the St. Paul & Tacoma Lbr. Co. and the North Coast Timber Co. on the other hand, as to the propriety of certain charges for switching cars of logs originating on the Tacoma Eastern RR.
“Several weeks ago Mr. Burroughs discussed the subject in rather general terms with Honorable Commission (er) Spinning and Mr. Calderhead, Statistician, when they were in Seattle on other matters, and in conformity with suggestion made at that time it is now formally and in detail presented to the Commission.
“Prior to the acquisition of the Tacoma Eastern R. R. by the Chicago, Milwaukee & Puget Sound Ry., the Tacoma Eastern R. R. handled logs cut by the Cascade Timber Co., and their successor, the North Coast Timber Co., to the St. Paul & Tacoma Lbr. Co. at Tacoma, at a rate of $1 per 1,000 ft. minimum 5,000 ft. per car, this rate being published in T. E. R. R., G. F. D. No. 76, W. R. C. No. 7. The logs were delivered at the St. Paul & Tacoma Lumber Co.’s log dump via the Northern Pacific Railway, the service for movement over the N. P. Ry. being performed by the Tacoma Eastern R. R. engine under a contract between that line and the N. P. Ry. by which a charge of 50c per car accrued to the N. P. Ry. and was paid by the consignee or consignor.
“The delivery service over the N. P. Ry. tracks was discontinued, effective October 14th, 1910, with the cancellation [37]*37of the contract between the N. P. Ry. and the Tacoma Eastern R. R. effective on the same date the Chicago, Milwaukee & Puget Sound Ry. issued its tariff P. C. L. No. 399-A, W. R. C. No. 75, which tariff was later succeeded by C. M. & St. P. Ry. G. E. D. No. 11849-A, W. P. S. C. No. 81, carrying a charge of 50c per car for switching at Tacoma, the intent being to secure to the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry. and its predecessor, the same terminal switching rate as charged against the logs by the Northern Pacific Railway.
“The payment of this charge of 50c per car has been continually protested by consignee and consignor and the subject has been one of continuous argument and discussion between the parties involved up to the present time. In this period some 13,000 to 14,000 cars of logs have been moved and there is outstanding in Tacoma station uncollected account an amount in round figures, $6,500.
“The contract between the Tacoma Eastern R. R. and the North Coast Timber Co. (Cascade Timber Co.) provides ‘the rates . . . shall not include the privilege of using such facilities as the party of the first part (Tac. Eastern R. R.) may have at the city of Tacoma for dumping logs.’
“The Tacoma Eastern R. R. was and is the owner of a certain piece of property in Tacoma located adj acent to Puyallup Waterway and the St. Paul & Tacoma Lbr. Co. log pond, immediately south of 11th Street South, on which there was constructed by the Chicago, Milwaukee & Puget Sound Ry. a piece of track connecting with other Chicago, Milwaukee & Puget Sound Ry. rails in the terminals on the Tacoma tide flats. This was commonly known as a Chicago, Milwaukee & Puget Sound Ry. track but being operated in making delivery of logs to the above referred to log dump on log shipments moving from the Tacoma Eastern R. R. stations, we cannot very well deny that the facility was more or less a joint proposition as between the Tacoma Eastern R. R. and the Chicago, Milwaukee & Puget Sound Ry. particularly in view of the fact that the. log trains from off the Tacoma Eastern R. R. are actually moved by Tacoma Eastern R. R. motive power over the tracks on Tacoma Eastern R. R. property serving the log dump, and that, therefore, by virtue of the contract between the Tacoma Eastern R. R. and the North Coast Timber Co. (Cascade Timber Co.) the Tacoma Eastern R. R. is obligated to assume the expense of 50c [38]*38per car for operation over the rails owned by the Chicago, Milwaukee & Puget Sound Railway.
“In view of the conditions above recited we have reached the conclusion that the position maintained in this matter is untenable and that the Chicago, Milwaukee & Puget Sound Ry. published in its tariff P. C. L. No. 399-A and subsequent issues, a charge which should be absorbed by a regular published absorption tariff of the Tacoma Eastern R. R. for use of the tracks of the Chicago Milwaukee & Puget Sound Ry., reaching the log dump.
“The matter is one which cannot be settled except by presentation to and authority received from the public service commission and we are therefore presenting the matter for your consideration with the prayer that the Tacoma Eastern R. R, be given authority to absorb the tariff charges in P. C. L. No. 399-A and succeeding issues retro-actively to the date of original publication, thus allowing us to lawfully cancel from our records the uncollected amounts against the St. Paul & Tacoma Lbr. Co.—North Coast Timber Co., and in lieu thereof, under the retro-active tariff of the Tacoma Eastern R. R. allow that line to make the absorption.
“In connection with this matter there is also involved the matter of charges collected on logs from points on the Tacoma Eastern R. R. intermediate with the movement covered by Tacoma Eastern Railroad G. F. D. No.

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Bluebook (online)
168 P. 782, 99 Wash. 34, 1917 Wash. LEXIS 1013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belcher-v-tacoma-eastern-railroad-wash-1917.